US8697503B2 - Active matrix displays and other electronic devices having plastic substrates - Google Patents
Active matrix displays and other electronic devices having plastic substrates Download PDFInfo
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- US8697503B2 US8697503B2 US12/376,980 US37698007A US8697503B2 US 8697503 B2 US8697503 B2 US 8697503B2 US 37698007 A US37698007 A US 37698007A US 8697503 B2 US8697503 B2 US 8697503B2
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H10—SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES; ELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- H10D—INORGANIC ELECTRIC SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES
- H10D86/00—Integrated devices formed in or on insulating or conducting substrates, e.g. formed in silicon-on-insulator [SOI] substrates or on stainless steel or glass substrates
- H10D86/01—Manufacture or treatment
- H10D86/021—Manufacture or treatment of multiple TFTs
- H10D86/0214—Manufacture or treatment of multiple TFTs using temporary substrates
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- G—PHYSICS
- G02—OPTICS
- G02F—OPTICAL DEVICES OR ARRANGEMENTS FOR THE CONTROL OF LIGHT BY MODIFICATION OF THE OPTICAL PROPERTIES OF THE MEDIA OF THE ELEMENTS INVOLVED THEREIN; NON-LINEAR OPTICS; FREQUENCY-CHANGING OF LIGHT; OPTICAL LOGIC ELEMENTS; OPTICAL ANALOGUE/DIGITAL CONVERTERS
- G02F1/00—Devices or arrangements for the control of the intensity, colour, phase, polarisation or direction of light arriving from an independent light source, e.g. switching, gating or modulating; Non-linear optics
- G02F1/01—Devices or arrangements for the control of the intensity, colour, phase, polarisation or direction of light arriving from an independent light source, e.g. switching, gating or modulating; Non-linear optics for the control of the intensity, phase, polarisation or colour
- G02F1/13—Devices or arrangements for the control of the intensity, colour, phase, polarisation or direction of light arriving from an independent light source, e.g. switching, gating or modulating; Non-linear optics for the control of the intensity, phase, polarisation or colour based on liquid crystals, e.g. single liquid crystal display cells
- G02F1/133—Constructional arrangements; Operation of liquid crystal cells; Circuit arrangements
- G02F1/1333—Constructional arrangements; Manufacturing methods
- G02F1/133305—Flexible substrates, e.g. plastics, organic film
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H10—SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES; ELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- H10D—INORGANIC ELECTRIC SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES
- H10D30/00—Field-effect transistors [FET]
- H10D30/60—Insulated-gate field-effect transistors [IGFET]
- H10D30/67—Thin-film transistors [TFT]
- H10D30/6758—Thin-film transistors [TFT] characterised by the insulating substrates
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H10—SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES; ELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- H10D—INORGANIC ELECTRIC SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES
- H10D86/00—Integrated devices formed in or on insulating or conducting substrates, e.g. formed in silicon-on-insulator [SOI] substrates or on stainless steel or glass substrates
- H10D86/40—Integrated devices formed in or on insulating or conducting substrates, e.g. formed in silicon-on-insulator [SOI] substrates or on stainless steel or glass substrates characterised by multiple TFTs
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H10—SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES; ELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- H10D—INORGANIC ELECTRIC SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES
- H10D86/00—Integrated devices formed in or on insulating or conducting substrates, e.g. formed in silicon-on-insulator [SOI] substrates or on stainless steel or glass substrates
- H10D86/40—Integrated devices formed in or on insulating or conducting substrates, e.g. formed in silicon-on-insulator [SOI] substrates or on stainless steel or glass substrates characterised by multiple TFTs
- H10D86/60—Integrated devices formed in or on insulating or conducting substrates, e.g. formed in silicon-on-insulator [SOI] substrates or on stainless steel or glass substrates characterised by multiple TFTs wherein the TFTs are in active matrices
Definitions
- This invention relates to the manufacture of electronic devices, such as active matrix display devices, on plastic substrates.
- AMLCD active matrix liquid crystal display
- AMLCD devices are usually made on large glass substrates that are 0.7 mm thick. Two plates are needed for a cell, so that completed displays are just over 1.4 mm thick.
- HF hydrofluoric acid
- the HF thinning is not attractive because it is a wasteful process that uses hazardous chemicals that are difficult to dispose of safely and economically. There is also some yield loss during the etching process due to pitting of the glass.
- TFTs thin film transistors
- plastic substrates plastic substrates
- WO 05/050754 One technique is described in WO 05/050754, in which a substrate arrangement is manufactured comprising a rigid carrier substrate and a plastic substrate over the rigid carrier substrate. The rigid carrier substrate is released from the plastic substrate after forming pixel circuits and display cells over the plastic substrate. This enables substantially conventional substrate handling, processing and cell making to be employed. WO 05/050754 also describes other known methods for fabricating electronic devices on plastic substrates.
- the release process proposed in WO 05/050754 is a laser lift-off process, and the substrate material is polyimide, applied by spin-coating.
- the substrate material is polyimide, applied by spin-coating.
- One of the advantages of polyimide is its high-temperature stability.
- transmissive (transflective) displays cannot be made, nor can polarization-dependent displays be made (such as LCDs) without great difficulty.
- a transparent substrate material which has high-temperature stability, is transparent, and preferably nonbirefringent.
- Typical transparent materials such as polycarbonate or silicones do not absorb sufficient UV energy to be lifted off by a laser release process.
- a method of manufacturing a thin film electronic device comprising:
- plastic coating to a rigid carrier substrate using a wet casting process, the plastic coating forming a plastic substrate and comprising a transparent plastic material and a UV absorbing additive;
- This invention provides a method of making transparent substrate materials suitable for a laser release process, through doping of the plastic material of the substrate with a UV absorber.
- This UV absorber absorbs in the wavelength of the lift-off laser (for example 308-351 nm, or 355 nm) with a very high absorption coefficient ⁇ (for example >10 4 cm ⁇ 1 ).
- the UV absorber is preferably selected such that it does not contribute to any birefringence in the transparent substrate material, and in this way the transparent substrate can be made non-birefringent.
- the plastic is capable of wet casting.
- the plastic layer can for example be applied to the rigid substrate by a spin-on process, and this plastic substrate then becomes the final device substrate.
- the plastic can be applied by spreading with a blade or printing techniques such as offset litho or silk screen printing.
- the UV absorbing additive may comprise one or more of:
- the plastic material is non-birefringent.
- the method may further comprise thermal curing of the plastic coating before forming thin film electronic elements.
- UV curing of the plastic coating may be used thereby to draw the UV absorbing additive to the boundary between the rigid carrier and the plastic coating, before forming thin film electronic elements. This can enhance the UV energy absorption at the interface for the laser release process.
- the thin film electronic elements may comprise thin film transistors.
- the rigid carrier substrate preferably comprises a glass substrate.
- the method can be used for manufacturing an active matrix display device, wherein:
- forming thin film electronic elements over the plastic substrate comprises forming an array of pixel circuits over the plastic substrate
- the method further comprises forming a display layer over the array of pixel circuits before releasing the rigid carrier substrate from the plastic substrate.
- the invention thus provides a method which enables substantially conventional substrate handling, processing and cell making to be employed in the manufacture of a display. This then enables the manufacturing process for making active matrix displays on plastic substrates to be carried out in standard factories, with only minimal extra equipment needed.
- the plastic displays can be made on standard glass substrates, and these can be re-used many times.
- This invention can be applied for example for LCDs, PLED or OLED displays and electrophoretic displays, and with amorphous silicon (a-Si) or Low Temperature Polycrystalline silicon (LTPS) TFTs.
- a-Si amorphous silicon
- LTPS Low Temperature Polycrystalline silicon
- the process essentially allows the TFTs to be fabricated on plastic layers, interconnects to be made, and some packaging to be carried out while the plastic layer is still stuck to the glass.
- the release is carried out after the cell formation. This is attractive for all plastic substrate applications, and is a particularly attractive process for making displays on flexible substrates.
- the method may further comprise manufacturing a second substrate arrangement, and wherein forming a display layer over the array of pixel circuits comprises mounting the first and second substrate arrangements with electro-optic material (such as LC material) sandwiched therebetween, the active matrix display device thereby comprising first and second substrates with the electro-optic material sandwiched therebetween.
- electro-optic material such as LC material
- the invention also provides a thin film electronic device, comprising a plastic substrate comprising a transparent plastic material and a UV absorbing additive and thin film electronic elements over the plastic substrate.
- FIG. 1 shows manufactured displays made in accordance with the invention being released from a common glass substrate for use in a mobile phone
- FIG. 2 shows a substrate according to the invention
- FIGS. 3 to 5 show absorption characteristics for different possible UV absorbers used in the substrate of FIG. 2 ;
- FIGS. 6A to 6M show the processing steps for one example of method of the invention starting with the substrate of FIG. 2 ;
- FIG. 7 shows a second example of manufactured display of the invention.
- FIG. 8 shows a third example of manufactured display of the invention.
- the invention relates generally to the manufacture of thin film electronic devices on plastic substrates, and concerns a process in which laser lift-off of a plastic substrate from a rigid carrier substrate is used.
- the invention concerns the plastic substrate material.
- the invention has particular application to the manufacture of an active matrix display device, and an example of the invention will be described in this context.
- FIG. 1 shows schematically the fabrication of plastic displays in accordance with the invention, and shows the final release stage.
- Completed displays 10 are released from a glass substrate 12 and are then used in devices such as a mobile phone 14 .
- a display can be made using laser release from a glass substrate, ink jet printing for color filters of the display, and VALC (vacuum aligned LC) for cell making.
- VALC vacuum aligned LC
- the example shown in detail is for the manufacture of liquid crystal display cells, having LC material sandwiched between two opposite (active and passive) substrates.
- the invention can be applied to many other display technologies and to non-display technologies, and the specific example is for illustration only.
- FIG. 2 shows a glass carrier plate 12 and a plastic layer 22 which functions as a plastic substrate.
- the interface between the plastic layer 22 and the carrier plate 12 is shown as 20 .
- a substrate in this form can form the basis of the active plate and the passive plate.
- This plastic layer must be strong enough to be one of the walls of the completed cell.
- the plastic layer should be transparent and ideally non-birefringent.
- the plastic layer should be able to absorb laser energy to effect lift-off of the plastic layer from the carrier plate.
- the invention concerns the plastic substrate material, and proposes the doping of a transparent plastic substrate, to alter the characteristics and make it suitable for a laser lift-off process.
- the substrate material should have a tensile strength of >200 MPa, and be nonbirefringent. It should also be deposited using a wet casting process, for example spin-coating.
- the plastic substrate can comprise a polycarbonate, silicone or cellulose triacetate, but is generally chosen as any material which is transparent and which may be wet cast (for example spin coated) from solution to produce a transparent and preferably non-birefringent film.
- the spin coating gives an extremely high quality surface and can give an extremely thin layer if required.
- the plastic is capable of wet casting.
- the plastic can thus instead be applied by spreading with a blade or printing techniques such as offset litho or silk screen printing. Other processes for coating large areas with a solution may also be used.
- the lift-off functionality can be introduced. This doping can be provided by mixing the substrate polymer and the additive.
- the UV absorbing additive preferably has an absorption peak within the band 300 nm to 360 nm with absorption coefficient of more than 10 5 cm ⁇ 1 . Furthermore the resulting substrate material should have an absorption length of less than 50 nm so that a surface absorption layer is defined.
- UV-absorbing additives examples include:
- Tinuvin 234 This is commercially available under the name Tinuvin 234 from Ciba (Trade Mark) specialty Chemicals).
- Each molecule contains one or more conjugatively linked electron donating (D) and electron accepting (A) pairs. This reaches an extinction of around 3.10 4 l/mol.cm at around 300 nm and is still transparent in the visible part of the spectrum.
- the absorption characteristic is shown in FIG. 3 .
- the absorption wavelength may shift towards the visible spectrum with increased extinction:
- This material has the absorption spectrum shown in FIG. 5 .
- the effect is essentially to provide a lift-off layer which can be laser activated to effect separation of the plastic substrate from the carrier plate.
- FIGS. 6A to 6M show schematic diagrams for sequential stages of one fabrication scheme. For clarity, these Figures show only one display being made, but in practice there would be many displays on large glass substrates, as shown in FIG. 1 .
- FIG. 6A shows the active plate, in which a-Si TFT arrays have been made on the plastic surface using (almost) standard processing.
- the maximum processing temperature will depend upon the plastic layer chosen, but it could be higher than for freestanding plastic films because the plastic is securely anchored to the rigid glass substrate 12 and there are no problems with shrinkage.
- the TFT array comprises a gate metal layer 30 , a silicon nitride gate dielectric layer 32 and ITO pixel electrodes 34 .
- the TFTs are shows schematically as 36 .
- FIG. 6B shows the addition of column spacers 40 for the LC cell. These could either be made by inkjet printing or spinning on a suitable polymer layer and then patterning by photolithography. Dispersed glass or plastic beads or rods could also be used instead, but column spacers that stick to both substrates can give plastic cells increased mechanical strength and help protect the cell from separating.
- FIG. 6C shows the fabrication of the passive plate substrate.
- the passive plate also comprises a glass substrate 50 , and optional release layer 52 and a plastic substrate 54 (which may be the same plastic as used for the active plate or may be a different plastic).
- FIG. 6C also shows black mask layers 56 . This demonstrates another advantage of fabricating plastic displays in this way, which is that structures can be built into the substrate. The black mask 56 could also be made at a later stage using standard methods.
- a second polymer layer 60 is added to the passive plate layers. This step is only needed if a buried black mask layer is used.
- recessed wells 70 are etched into the passive carrier plate. This step is only needed if color filters are to be ink jet printed. These wells serve to define accurately the shape of the color filter pixels.
- the wells can be etched into the plastic layer either by photolithography and oxygen plasma, laser ablation or by stamping with a hard mask.
- FIG. 6F shows the passive carrier plate after ink jet printing of the color filter layers 80 .
- FIG. 6G shows an ITO layer 90 sputtered onto the glass substrate. Furthermore, discrete display devices are formed over the common active plate glass substrate by etching away the ITO, plastic and a-Si release layer.
- LC droplets are put onto one of the plates before alignment and plate coupling is carried out under vacuum.
- VALC Vacuum Alignment with Liquid Crystal
- FIG. 6H shows an LC drop 100 put on the active plate area of the plastic display.
- the assembled panel of FIG. 6I is then formed by using the VALC process.
- One of the glass plates is then removed from the plastic layer that it is stuck to. This can be done by laser irradiation or lamp heating through the glass of the release layer or bottom of the plastic layer, or by heating the glass plate on a hot plate.
- FIG. 6J shows the glass substrate of the passive plate removed, for example by a laser release process.
- the passive glass carrier plate can then be cleaned to remove all traces of residues from the passive plate process before being re-used.
- a polarizer 110 is then added. It is easier to do it at this stage before final release of the display because the display still has rigidity due to its coupling to the glass.
- the polarizer also gives added strength to the top plastic layer.
- a Chip-on-Glass process can also be done at this stage, or interconnect foils added. The advantage of doing this at this stage is that the plastic sheet is still firmly stuck to the glass, simplifying alignment and fixing.
- the plastic substrate of the active plate is also released from the active plate glass substrate 12 , which can also be cleaned and used again.
- a polarizer film is also applied to the plastic substrate 22 of each active plate.
- the second polarizer 112 is shown in FIG. 6M , which shows the completed display.
- the polarizer must be applied display by display in this case. If VALC is not used, then interconnects are made after formation of the completed cells shown in FIG. 6M .
- the plastic substrates are released from the glass substrate by laser release from the plastic that is directly in contact with the glass substrate
- Laser irradiation (XeCl or 3-omega YAG) can be used through the glass substrate.
- a thin layer, ⁇ 1 ⁇ m, is photo-ablated leaving freestanding polymer films with good mechanical integrity.
- the glass substrate may be cleaned before the wet casting deposition process so that surface contaminants such as oils and ions are removed prior to the coating process.
- Conventional solvents can be used to perform the cleaning process.
- the invention relates more generally to the production of electronic devices comprising thin film circuitry on a plastic substrate.
- the invention also comprises applying a plastic coating with the UV-absorbing additive to a rigid carrier substrate using a wet cast process, forming thin film electronic elements over the plastic substrate and then releasing the rigid carrier substrate from the plastic substrate.
- This process again enables substantially conventional substrate handling to be used in the processing of a thin film electronic device (for example having TFTs) on a plastic substrate.
- a wet cast (e.g. spin-on) process gives a flat, high quality surface.
- the spin-on process enables very thin substrates to be formed.
- a substrate may be formed with thickness as low as 3 ⁇ m.
- the invention provides firstly the application of plastic to a substrate.
- the thickness of the plastic layers will normally be in the thickness range 2 to 50 ⁇ m. This plastic will ultimately become the plastic substrate of the display, for display applications. Suitable wet casting processes are spin coating, printing and spreading.
- the substrate can be either a standard glass substrate or a glass substrate coated with a blue-light absorbing layer. The choice depends on the plastic used and laser release properties.
- a passivation layer will normally be desired, applied above the plastic layer.
- Suitable layer types arc silicon nitride or silicon oxide deposited by Plasma Enhanced Chemical Vapour deposition (PECVD) or sputtering.
- TFT arrays are then be made on the plastic/passivation layer.
- the TFT array fabrication can be carried out under fairly standard array processing conditions for a-Si or Low Temperature Poly-Si (LTPS). TFTs. There may have to be some small process changes to ensure that the deposited layers do not have high mechanical stress.
- LTPS Low Temperature Poly-Si
- the use of standard glass substrates coated with very thin layers of plastic and standard TFT array processing means that this process can be used in existing TFT fabrication plants.
- TFTs can be used as the active device element for multiplexing several different display types, not only the LCD example above. Whatever the display type is, the display is fabricated while the TFT array is still stuck onto the glass. This means that standard display fabrication tools and techniques can be used and the presence of a thin layer of plastic will not cause any significant differences.
- the display drivers can also be bonded to the display at this time.
- the laser used to remove the plastic substrate from the carrier is applied through the glass substrate to hit the bottom of the plastic.
- the laser for this purpose will normally have to be scanned to cover the complete area of the display.
- Pulsed excimer lasers with wavelengths of 308 nm and 351 nm or pulsed 3-omega YAG lasers with a wavelength of 355 nm can be used.
- the invention enables direct laser release of a clear plastic substrate, and such a substrate can be used with all display types, including transmissive and transflective LCDs and downward emitting OLEDS and PLEDs.
- liquid crystal display is only one example of display technology which can benefit from the invention.
- FIG. 7 shows an example reflective display device 200 using electrophoretic display material.
- An example of this type of display is known as an E-Ink display.
- An array of thin film transistors 202 is formed on a plastics layer 204 on glass.
- the TFT array is provided over a silicon nitride passivation layer 206 and a silicon nitride gate insulator layer 208 , and the ITO pixels 210 are formed over a polymer passivation layer 212 .
- the glass substrate is not shown in FIG. 7 , which shows the final removed display device.
- a layer of electrophoretic material comprises capsules 214 and is laminated onto the TFT array.
- the capsules are responsive to a local electric field across the ink foil layer.
- This layer is inherently tacky, and is placed on the TFT array and heated, to approximately 100 degrees Celsius, and rolled.
- the display modules arc finished with a ITO layer 216 and a plastic protective layer 218 .
- FIG. 8 shows an example polymer LED downwardly emitting display device 300 .
- An array of encapsulated thin film transistor circuits 302 are formed on a clear plastic (such as silicone, BCB or parylene) substrate 304 , and with transparent ITO pixel electrodes 306 formed over a silicon nitride passivation layer 308 .
- a hydrophilic polymer wall 310 surrounds the pixel (although this is not required for organic LEDs) which is defined by the polymer (or organic) LED material 312 .
- a metal cathode 314 such as Ca, covers the structure, and is covered by a polymer passivation layer 316 .
- FIGS. 7 and 8 are manufactured in accordance with the invention, and it will be appreciated that numerous other specific display designs, as well as other electronic component designs, can be made using the approach explained above.
- suitable display types include OLED (organic LED), PLED (polymer LED), EL (electroluminescent) and PDLC (polymer dispersed LC) displays, as well as LCDs.
- UV absorber A number of examples of UV absorber have been given.
- the molecule of the UV absorber contains one or more aromatic groups, conjugatively linked, optionally by one or more double bond.
- Each aromatic group optionally contains one or more hetroatoms selected from N, O and S.
- Each molecule optionally contains one ore more conjugatively linked electron donating (D) and electron accepting (A) pairs.
- UV adsorbing molecules are 2-hydroxy-benzophenones, hydroxyphenyl-s-triazines and oxalanilides.
- the extinction coefficient of the UV absorber should preferably be greater than 10 4 and close to 10 5 if possible, and the additive needs to be soluble in the main substrate material.
- the UV absorber should be transparent in the visible spectrum, for example more than 90% transparent in the 400 nm-800 nm wavelength range.
- plastic material for the substrate typically has been given above.
- high-temperature materials will be of interest as thin film transistors are typically processed at temperatures such as 250 degrees Celsius.
- the plastic substrates material will be selected to have a glass transition and/or decomposition temperature above 200 degrees Celsius.
- acrylate monomers low molecular weight or oligomeric
- oligomeric containing a mixture of monofunctional, bifunctional or higher functional monomers
- a two layer system may also be used, for example in the case of crosslinked materials.
- a first very thin layer near the rigid substrate can contain a high concentration of the dye.
- a second layer on top of this can be formed from the same polymer, but without the dye. The advantage of such a multi layer structure is that higher dye concentrations can be used near the interface.
- Polyesters may be suitable for some applications (often these are birefringent), polystyrenes (often these are brittle), polyoxides (some particular examples may be particularly suitable such as
- PPO poly(2,6-dimethyl-1,4-phenylene oxide
- the plastic substrate is described above as transparent, but it should be understood that there will be some light absorption, and the degree of transparency must be sufficient for the device to perform the desired function of the end product.
- the tensile modulus of the transparent substrate should preferably be greater than 100 MPa and more preferably greater than 200 MPa.
- Examples of preferred substrate material are polycarbonates and polymethacrylates.
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Abstract
Description
- (i) molecules with a 2-(2-hydroxyphenyl)-trizole unit such as 2-(2H-benzotriazol-2-yl)-4,6-bis(1-methyl-1-phenylethyl)phenol.
- (ii) molecules containing conjugatively linked aromatic systems such as Stilbene
- (iii) Stilbene with the benzene substituted with electron donating and withdrawing groups.
- (iv) Benzene substituted with electron donating and withdrawing groups such as Ethyl-p-dimethylamino benzoate
- (v) molecules containing conjugatively linked aromatic and heteroaromatic groups such as 2,5-diphenyloxazole
- (i) Polyethersulfones (PES), polyimides or polyamides.
- (ii) Acrylate or methacrylates.
- (iii) Cellulose based materials, for example cellulose acetate.
- (iv) Polyvinylacetate or vinyl acetate/vinyl chloride copolymers.
Claims (40)
Applications Claiming Priority (4)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| EP06118726 | 2006-08-10 | ||
| EP06118726.6 | 2006-08-10 | ||
| EP06118726 | 2006-08-10 | ||
| PCT/IB2007/053120 WO2008018026A2 (en) | 2006-08-10 | 2007-08-07 | Active matrix displays and other electronic devices having plastic substrates |
Publications (2)
| Publication Number | Publication Date |
|---|---|
| US20100163878A1 US20100163878A1 (en) | 2010-07-01 |
| US8697503B2 true US8697503B2 (en) | 2014-04-15 |
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| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| US12/376,980 Active 2029-04-29 US8697503B2 (en) | 2006-08-10 | 2007-08-07 | Active matrix displays and other electronic devices having plastic substrates |
Country Status (5)
| Country | Link |
|---|---|
| US (1) | US8697503B2 (en) |
| EP (1) | EP2052406A2 (en) |
| JP (1) | JP5336371B2 (en) |
| CN (2) | CN101501832A (en) |
| WO (1) | WO2008018026A2 (en) |
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| EP2551895B1 (en) * | 2011-07-27 | 2013-11-27 | STMicroelectronics Srl | Method of manufacturing an electronic device having a plastic substrate |
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| JP3690135B2 (en) * | 1998-09-10 | 2005-08-31 | セイコーエプソン株式会社 | Device manufacturing method |
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- 2007-08-07 US US12/376,980 patent/US8697503B2/en active Active
- 2007-08-07 EP EP07805341A patent/EP2052406A2/en not_active Withdrawn
- 2007-08-07 WO PCT/IB2007/053120 patent/WO2008018026A2/en not_active Ceased
- 2007-08-07 CN CNA2007800298076A patent/CN101501832A/en active Pending
- 2007-08-07 CN CN2013101437849A patent/CN103219285A/en active Pending
- 2007-08-07 JP JP2009523423A patent/JP5336371B2/en active Active
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Cited By (2)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US11621406B2 (en) | 2016-06-01 | 2023-04-04 | Samsung Display Co., Ltd. | Display apparatus and method of manufacturing the same |
| US10011104B2 (en) * | 2016-06-06 | 2018-07-03 | Ncc Nano, Llc | Method for performing delamination of a polymer film |
Also Published As
| Publication number | Publication date |
|---|---|
| JP5336371B2 (en) | 2013-11-06 |
| JP2010500609A (en) | 2010-01-07 |
| EP2052406A2 (en) | 2009-04-29 |
| US20100163878A1 (en) | 2010-07-01 |
| CN103219285A (en) | 2013-07-24 |
| WO2008018026A3 (en) | 2008-04-10 |
| CN101501832A (en) | 2009-08-05 |
| WO2008018026A2 (en) | 2008-02-14 |
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